Republicans Breathe a Sigh of Relief

The results are in in Georgia and Karen Handel will be the first Republican woman to represent the state in the House of Representatives. Handel defeated Democrat Jon Ossoff in the most expensive congressional race in history, buoyed by a massive injection of GOP ad dollars which trounced spending on her rivals' behalf. The result was a sigh of relief for Republicans in Washington, who had to work far harder in the Trump era for what would otherwise be considered a safe GOP seat. Republicans feared that middle class, college educated Republicans—who were never sold on Trump—would stay home or even back Ossoff, but their efforts to tie the novice candidate to liberals in Washington, like House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, won the day. For Democrats, the defeat is just the latest demoralizing loss in a year of them, as the party has struggled to turn base anger at President Trump into votes. Meanwhile, Republicans will still be on the defensive next year, but have a playbook that now reliably works—that is if they keep raising the cash to fund it. For Trump, the result is no doubt a victory. But Handel did her best to avoid mentioning his name and there is no indication that her victory will spell an easing of pressure on his beleaguered White House.

Senate Republicans are set to unveil the top-lines of their bill to repeal and replace Obamacare Thursday, in hopes of setting up a vote next week. Democrats are preparing to use whatever stall tactics and obstructive maneuvers available to them. But they might not need to do much. Whatever plan is announced Thursday will face broad skepticism even from Republicans in the Senate—let alone the more unruly House and the unpredictable White House.

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"In hindsight perhaps I should have camped out in front of the headquarters of the DNC." — Former DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson testifying on Capitol Hill about the Democratic National Committee's refusal of help after the email hack

"I mean, the President clearly wants a bill that has heart in it. He believes that healthcare is something that is near and dear to so many families and individuals. He made it clear from the beginning that that was one of his priorities. And as the Senate works its way through this bill, as the House did, any ideas are welcome to strengthen it, to make it more affordable, more accessible, and deliver the care that it needs." — White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer on President Trump's priorities for the GOP healthcare bill. He did not define what "heart" means